An
unexpected job relocation landed us in Georgia and, rather than rent or buy; we
decided to build a house. A fortunate set of circumstances indeed, but it has
eaten up my precious writing time. I usually write in the morning, when I am
fresh with ideas. Lately, however, my early morning ideas have more to do with
my house-in-progress than my work-in-progress. The two endeavors are rather
similar in some ways.
Both
building and writing need a basic structure upon which to create. A novel
requires a basic plot structure, setting, characters, and a theme. A house
needs a foundation, load-bearing walls, plumbing, and insulation before it turns
into a home.
Along
the path to writing a story and building a home, there are so many choices to
be made. It is almost paralyzing. Many days, I have felt unable to make a
decision on my house-in-progress or my work-in-progress. In her book, Story Genius: How to Use Brain Science to go
Beyond Outlining and Write a Riveting Novel, Lisa Chron writes, “Myriad
studies have shown that the more choices we have, the less likely we are to
choose anything. Not only that but limitless choice tends to trigger anxiety.”
I am constantly revising my house-in-progress and my
work-in-progress. Like cutting out a darling sentence that no longer works,
I’ve had to let go of items I loved that no longer go with the
house-in-progress. I’ve also had to strike out my vague, overused nouns from my
vocabulary like “whatcha ma call it” and “thing a ma jig” for precise builder nouns
like “newel” and “corbel.” Then I wake up at two in the morning with the
dreaded realization that a small change I made means a complete overhaul throughout
the house. It may even cause a delay in the house being completed. But it must
be done. This too, has happened in my “work-in-progress.”
Despite
my doubts and anxiety, I move forward one step at a time focusing on what is important
to me, to my house, and to my manuscript. What I value is a comfy home and a
compelling story that invites you to pull up a cozy chair, sit a spell, and read.
Ellen Kazimer is a 2014 graduate of
Hamline MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults. She writes picture books,
nonfiction, and middle grades novels. Her full bio can be found on her website http://ellenkazimer.com.
Ellen, what a thoughtful post. Before you came to Hamline, we were building a house and I almost lost my mind . . . but I used it like you did as a metaphor for a talk I gave on plotting. So much trust involved in building and in writing that it is a terrific metaphor. I know you did a wonderful job and hope to see it someday. 9 years later I can report that the angst goes away ... and the joy of creating something stays. cheers to you.
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